A Christmas Matinee
by Mrs. M.A.L. Lane
It was the day before Christmas in the
year 189-. Snow was falling heavily in the streets of Boston, but the crowd of
shoppers seemed undiminished. As the storm increased, groups gathered at the
corners and in sheltering doorways to wait for belated cars; but the holiday
cheer was in the air, and there was no grumbling. Mothers dragging tired
children through the slush of the streets; pretty girls hurrying home for the
holidays; here and there a harassed-looking man with perhaps a single package
which he had taken a whole morning to select--all had the same spirit of
tolerant good-humor.
"School Street! School
Street!" called the conductor of an electric car. A group of young people
at the farther end of the car started to their feet. One of them, a young man
wearing a heavy fur-trimmed coat, addressed the conductor angrily.
"I said, 'Music Hall,' didn't
I?" he demanded. "Now we've got to walk back in the snow because of
your stupidity!"
"Oh, never mind, Frank!" one
of the girls interposed. "We ought to have been looking out ourselves! Six
of us, and we went by without a thought! It is all Mrs. Tirrell's fault! She
shouldn't have been so entertaining!"
The young matron dimpled and blushed.
"That's charming of you, Maidie," she said, gathering up her silk
skirts as she prepared to step down into the pond before her. "The
compliment makes up for the blame. But how it snows!"
"It doesn't matter. We all have
gaiters on," returned Maidie Williams, undisturbed.
"Fares, please!" said the
conductor stolidly.
Frank Armstrong thrust his gloved hand
deep into his pocket with angry vehemence. "There's your money," he
said, "and be quick about the change, will you? We've lost time
enough!"
The man counted out the change with
stiff, red fingers, closed his lips firmly as if to keep back an obvious
rejoinder, rang up the six fares with careful accuracy, and gave the signal to
go ahead. The car went on into the drifting storm.
Armstrong laughed shortly as he
rapidly counted the bits of silver lying in his open palm. He turned
instinctively, but two or three cars were already between him and the one he was
looking for.
"The fellow must be an
imbecile," he said, rejoining the group on the crossing. "He's given
me back a dollar and twenty cents, and I handed him a dollar bill."
"Oh, can't you stop him?"
cried Maidie Williams, with a backward step into the wet street.
The Harvard junior, who was carrying
her umbrella, protested: "What's the use. Miss Williams? He'll make it up
before he gets to Scollay Square, you may be sure. Those chaps don't lose
anything. Why, the other day, I gave one a quarter and he went off as cool as
you please. 'Where's my change?' said I. 'You gave me a nickel,' said he. And
there wasn't anybody to swear that I didn't except myself, and I didn't
count."
"But that doesn't make any
difference," insisted the girl warmly. "Because one conductor was
dishonest, we needn't be. I beg your pardon, Frank, but it does seem to me just
stealing."
"Oh, come along!" said her
cousin, with an easy laugh. "I guess the West End Corporation won't go
without their dinners to-morrow. Here, Maidie, here's the ill-gotten fifty
cents. _I_ think you ought to treat us all after the concert; still, I won't
urge you. I wash my hands of all responsibility. But I do wish you hadn't such
an unpleasant conscience."
Maidie flushed under the sting of his
cousinly rudeness, but she went on quietly with the rest. It was evident that
any attempt to overtake the car was out of the question.
"Did you notice his number,
Frank?" she asked, suddenly.
"No, I never thought of it"
said Frank, stopping short. "However, I probably shouldn't make any
complaint if I had. I shall forget all about it tomorrow. I find it's never
safe to let the sun go down on my wrath. It's very likely not to be there the
next day."
"I wasn't thinking of making a
complaint," said Maidie; but the two young men were enjoying the small
joke too much to notice what she said.
The great doorway of Music Hall was
just ahead. In a moment the party were within its friendly shelter, stamping
off the snow. The girls were adjusting veils and hats with adroit feminine
touches; the pretty chaperon was beaming approval upon them, and the young men
were taking off their wet overcoats, when Maidie turned again in sudden
desperation.
"Mr. Harris," she said,
rather faintly, for she did not like to make herself disagreeable, "do you
suppose that car comes right back from Scollay Square?"
"What car?" asked Walter
Harris, blankly. "Oh, the one we came in? Yes, I suppose it does. They're
running all the time, anyway. Why, you are not sick, are you, Miss
Williams?"
There was genuine concern in his tone.
This girl, with her sweet, vibrant voice, her clear gray eyes, seemed very
charming to him. She wasn't beautiful, perhaps, but she was the kind of girl he
liked. There was a steady earnestness in the gray eyes that made him think of
his mother.
"No," said Maidie, slowly.
"I'm all right, thank you. But I wish I could find that man again. I know
sometimes they have to make it up if their accounts are wrong, and I
couldn't--we couldn't feel very comfortable--"
Frank Armstrong interrupted her.
"Maidie," he said, with the studied calmness with which one speaks to
an unreasonable child, "you are perfectly absurd. Here it is within five
minutes of the tune for the concert to begin. It is impossible to tell when
that car is coming back. You are making us all very uncomfortable. Mrs.
Tirrell, won't you please tell her not to spoil our afternoon?"
"I think he's right,
Maidie," said Mrs. Tirrell. "It's very nice of you to feel so sorry for
the poor man, but he really was very careless. It was all his own fault. And
just think how far he made us walk! My feet are quite damp. We ought to go in
directly or we shall all take cold, and I'm sure you wouldn't like that, my
dear."
She led the way as she spoke, the two
girls and young Armstrong following. Maidie hesitated. It was so easy to go in,
to forget everything in the light and warmth and excitement.
"No," said she, very firmly,
and as much to herself as to the young man who stood waiting for her. "I
must go back and try to make it right. I'm so sorry, Mr. Harris, but if you
will tell them--"
"Why, I'm going with you, of
course" said the young fellow, impulsively. "If I'd only looked once
at the man I'd go alone, but I shouldn't know him from Adam."
Maidie laughed. "Oh, I don't want
to lose the whole concert, Mr. Harris, and Frank, has all the tickets. You must
go after them and try to make my peace. I'll come just as soon as I can. Don't
wait for me, please. If you'll come and look for me here the first number, and
not let them scold me too much--" She ended with an imploring little catch
in her breath that was almost a sob.
"They sha'n't say a word, Miss
Williams!" cried Walter Harris, with honest admiration in his eyes.
But she was gone already, and
conscious that further delay was only making matters worse, he went on into the
hall.
Meanwhile, the car swung heavily along
the wet rails on its way to the turning-point. It was nearly empty now. An old
gentleman and his nurse were the only occupants. Jim Stevens, the conductor,
had stepped inside the car.
"Too bad I forgot those young
people wanted to get off at Music Hall," he was thinking to himself.
"I don't see how I came to do it. That chap looked as if he wanted to
complain of me, and I don't know as I blame him. I'd have said I was sorry if
he hadn't been so sharp with his tongue. I hope he won't complain just now.
'Twould be a pretty bad time for me to get into trouble, with Mary and the baby
both sick. I'm too sleepy to be good for much, that's a fact. Sitting up three
nights running takes hold of a fellow somehow when he's at work all day. The
rent's paid, that's one thing, if it hasn't left me but half a dollar to my
name. Hullo!" He was struck by a sudden distinct recollection of the coins
he had returned. "Why, I gave him fifty cents too much!"
He glanced up at the dial which
indicated the fares and began to count the change in his pocket. He knew
exactly how much money he had had at the beginning of the trip. He counted
carefully. Then he plunged his hand into the heavy canvas pocket of his coat.
Perhaps he had half a dollar there. No, it was empty!
He faced the fact reluctantly. Fifty
cents short, ten fares! Gone into the pocket of the young gentleman with the
fur collar! The conductor's hand shook as he put the money back in his pocket.
It meant--what did it mean? He drew a long breath.
Christmas Eve! A dark dreary little
room upstairs in a noisy tenement house. A pale, thin woman on a shabby lounge
vainly trying to quiet a fretful child. The child is thin and pale, too, with a
hard, racking cough. There is a small fire in the stove, a very small fire;
coal is so high. The medicine stands on the shelf. "Medicine won't do much
good," the doctor had said; "he needs beef and cream."
Jim's heart sank at the thought. He
could almost hear the baby asking; "Isn't papa coming soon? Isn't he,
mamma?"
"Poor little kid!" Jim said,
softly, under his breath. "And I shan't have a thing to take home to him;
nor Mary's violets, either. It'll be the first Christmas that ever happened. I
suppose that chap would think it was ridiculous for me to be buying violets. He
wouldn't understand what the flowers mean to Mary. Perhaps he didn't notice I
gave him too much. That kind don't know how much they have. They just pull it
out as if it was newspaper."
The conductor went out into the snow
to help the nurse, who was assisting the old gentleman to the ground. Then the
car swung on again. Jim turned up the collar of his coat about his ears and
stamped his feet. There was the florist's shop where he had meant to buy the
violets, and the toy-shop was just around the corner.
A thought flashed across his tired
brain. "Plenty of men would do it; they do it every day. Nobody ever would
be the poorer for it. This car will be crowded going home. I needn't ring in
every fare; nobody could tell. But Mary! She wouldn't touch those violets if she
knew. And she'd know. I'd have to tell her. I couldn't keep it from her, she's
that quick."
He jumped off to adjust the trolley
with a curious sense of unreality. It couldn't be that he was really going home
this Christmas Eve with empty hands. Well, they must all suffer together for
his carelessness. It was his own fault, but it was hard. And he was so tired!
To his amazement he found his eyes
were blurred as he watched the people crowding into the car. What? Was he going
to cry like a baby--he, a great burly man of thirty years?
"It's no use," he thought.
"I couldn't do it. The first time I gave Mary violets was the night she
said she'd marry me. I told her then I'd do my best to make her proud of me. I
guess she wouldn't be very proud of a man who could cheat. She'd rather starve
than have a ribbon she couldn't pay for."
He rang up a dozen fares with a steady
hand. The temptation was over. Six more strokes--then nine without a falter. He
even imagined the bell rang more distinctly than usual, even encouragingly. The
car stopped. Jim flung the door open with a triumphant sweep of his arm. He
felt ready to face the world. But the baby--his arm dropped. It was hard.
He turned to help the young girl who
was waiting at the step. Through the whirling snow he saw her eager face, with
a quick recognition lighting the steady eyes, and wondered dimly, as he stood
with his hand on the signal-strap, where he could have seen her before.
He knew immediately.
"There was a mistake," she
said, with a shy tremor in her voice. "You gave us too much change and
here it is." She held out to Jim the piece of silver which had given him
such an unhappy quarter of an hour.
He took it like one dazed. Would the
young lady think he was crazy to care so much about so small a coin? He must
say something. "Thank you, miss," he stammered as well as he could.
"You see, I thought it was gone--and there's the baby--and it's Christmas
Eve--and my wife's sick--and you can't understand--"
It certainly was not remarkable that
she couldn't.
"But I do," she said,
simply. "I was afraid of that. And I thought perhaps there was a baby, so
I brought my Christmas present for her," and something else dropped into
Jim's cold hand.
"What you waiting for?"
shouted the motorman from the front platform. The girl had disappeared in the
snow.
Jim rang the bell to go ahead, and
gazed again at the two shining half dollars in his hand.
"I didn't have a chance to tell
her," he explained to his wife late in the evening, as he sat in a tiny
rocking-chair several sizes too small for him, "that the baby wasn't a her
at all, though if I thought he'd grow up into such a lovely one as she is, I
don't know but I almost wish he was."
"Poor Jim!" said Mary, with
a little laugh as she put up her hand to stroke his rough cheek. "I guess
you're tired."
"And I should say," he
added, stretching out his long legs toward the few red sparks in the bottom of
the grate, "I should say she had tears in her eyes, too, but I was that
near crying myself I couldn't be sure."
The little room was sweet with the
odour of English violets. Asleep in the bed lay the boy, a toy horse clasped
close to his breast.
"Bless her heart!" said
Mary, softly.
"Well, Miss Williams," said
Walter Harris, as he sprang to meet a snow-covered figure coming swiftly along
the sidewalk. "I can see that you found him. You've lost the first number,
but they won't scold you--not this time."
The girl turned a radiant face upon him. "Thank you," she said, shaking the snowy crystals from her skirt. "I don't care now if they do. I should have lost more than that if I had stayed."
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